No, it is a sentence that might contain an adjective. But the noun soccer placed before the noun ball is not considered an adjective. It is a noun adjunct or attributive noun that does not modify the ball.
Soccer isn't an adjective, it's a noun. There are no adjectives in the sentence. 'Boy' and 'soccer' are nouns, and 'played' is the verb.
We played soccer (noun) at the soccer (adject) club.
It's the word that describes the noun in the sentence.
There is no adjective in your sentence. An adjective is a descriptive word of a verb or noun. Nothing is being described in your sentence.
When using a noun as an adjective, the noun is still a noun. This noun use is called 'noun as adjective'. If a noun is frequently used to describe a specific noun, it becomes a compound noun; for example bus stop or cell phone. Note: There is currently a controversy raging among language experts about adding the designation for the noun 'fun' an adjective, because more and more people seem to use it that way. The 'fun as an adjective' group may eventually win. Then, the experts will have this problem: fun, more fun, most fun or fun, funner, funnest.
There is no noun in the sentence:will = verb (auxiliary)they = pronoun (subject of the sentence)be = verbangry = adjective (subject complement)
it is a possessive pronoun (but used as an adjective, because it modifies a noun).
When one is used before a noun, it is an adjective.Examples:This is one sentence with the adjective form.This is one example of using the word.
It takes two to tango.
there is no adjective in this sentence, an adjective describes a noun
There are two definitions of 'retirement.' One is a noun, and one is an adjective. So, basically it depends on how you are using it in a sentence.
End is a noun in that sentence.
The noun: futureThe adjective: curious
Examples of Adjective Noun patterns are: The football team is good. (Football is the Adjective in this sentence, but, it can also be a Noun.) <--- Example: The football was sticky. (Football is now a Noun in this sentence.) The green eyes scared me! (Green is the Adjective in this sentence, but, it can also be a Noun.) <--- Example: Green is my favorite color. (Green is now the Noun in this sentence.)
irresolution means uncertainly or indecision. I am using this word in the adjective form, not the noun.
The adjectives in the sentence are: many, happy, talkative. The noun in the sentence is: adults. There are no pronouns in this sentence. Note: The word 'many' can function as a noun, a pronoun, or an adjective. In the example sentence, the word 'many' is an adjective that describes the noun 'adults'.
An adjective describes a noun or pronoun.
It's both. In the sentence "My initial reaction was horror", it is an adjective; in the sentence "Write your initial in the box", it is a noun.
The adjective in that sentence is "beautiful". An adjective is used to desciribe a noun. The noun in the sentence is "gift".